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French Open 2025: Daily schedule, how to watch, prize money

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The season’s second grand slam event — the French Open — is here, with 128 players in each of the men’s and women’s singles draws looking to lift the title at Roland Garros. Here’s everything you need to know.

Today’s schedule

Men’s singles bracket | Women’s singles bracket

Selected first-round matches on Tuesday, from 10am BST.

Men’s

Daniil Medvedev (11) vs. Cameron Norrie
Alexander Zverev (3) vs. Learner Tien
Mackenzie McDonald vs. Novak Djokovic (6)
Alexandre Muller vs. Jakub Mensik (19)
Hubert Hurkacz (30) vs. Joao Fonseca
Mattia Bellucci vs. Jack Draper (5)
Gael Monfils vs. Hugo Dellien

Women’s

Mirra Andreeva (6) vs. Cristina Bucsa
Varvara Gracheva vs. Sofia Kenin (31)
Magdalena Frech (25) vs. Ons Jabeur
Olivia Gadecki vs. Coco Gauff (2)
Sonay Kartal vs. Erika Andreeva
Anca Todoni vs. Jessica Pegula (3)

Key details and how to watch

Dates: May 25 to June 8

Venue: Roland Garros, Paris

How to watch: The French Open will be broadcast live on TNT Sports and discovery+ in the UK. You can also follow live updates on ESPN.

The British hopes

British tennis will be more hopeful than usual entering this year’s French Open, with stars Jack Draper, Emma Raducanu and Katie Boulter all enjoying some success on clay this season.

Draper reached the final of the Madrid Open before losing to Norway’s Casper Ruud in three sets. He then made it to the Italian Open quarterfinals in Rome, only to be stopped by eventual champion Carlos Alcaraz.

The 23-year-old is yet to make it past the first round after losing his opening matches in the past two years. However, he is expected to make a better run this time out.

In the women’s draw, Raducanu has put aside her aversions to clay and mananged to earn some success — the highlight of which came at the Italian Open where she won three matches in a row on the surface for the first time in her career before she was stopped in her tracks in Rome by American Coco Gauff.

Raducanu suffered an injury scare just four days before the French Open in a three-set defeat to Danielle Collins in Strasbourg on Wednesday.

Elsewhere, Katie Boulter managed just one win between Madrid and Rome — against world No. 64 Katerina Siniakova. However, she entered the lower-ranked WTA 125k Paris event last week and emerged as the champion, raising hopes that she has finally tuned her game for the surface.

Other British players in the singles draws this week include Jacob Fearnley, Jodie Burrage and Sonay Kartal.

French Open 2025: Jack Draper, Emma Raducanu and other British stars to watch


British players’ results and next match

MEN’S SINGLES

Jack Draper

First round — vs. Mattia Bellucci (Tuesday)

Jacob Fearnley

First round — beat Stan Wawrinka 7-6 (6), 6-3, 6-2
Second round — vs. Ugo Humbert (Wednesday)

Cameron Norrie

First round — vs. Daniil Medvedev (Tuesday)


WOMEN’S SINGLES

Katie Boulter

First round — beat Carole Monnet 7-6 (4), 6-1, 6-1
second round — vs.Madison Keys (Wednesday)

Emma Raducanu

First round — beat Xinyu Wang 7-5, 4-6, 6-3
Second round — vs. Iga Swiatek (Wednesday)

Sonay Kartal

First round — vs. Erika Andreeva (Tuesday)

Jodie Burrage

First round — defeated by Danielle Collins 7-6 (1), 6-4

Who are the favourites?

For the men’s draw, it is hard to look past Italian Open finalists Jannik Sinner and Carlos Alcaraz as the clear favourites for the title. It was Alcaraz who took the title in Rome, winning the final in two sets. He is also the reigning champion at Roland Garros.

Don’t look past Sinner, though. Rome marked the world No. 1’s return to tennis after a three-month ban over two positive doping tests in March 2024.

In the women’s draw, the bracket is a little more open.

Iga Swiatek is seeking her fourth straight title at Roland Garros and her fifth in the past six years. However, she has been a level below her imperious best in recent weeks, notably suffering a shock third-round Italian Open defeat to American Danielle Collins.

The contenders to unseat Switaek are numerous. There’s American Coco Gauff, who reached the final in both Madrid and Rome in recent weeks, although she lost each time to Aryna Sabalenka and Jasmine Paolini, respectively. All three will be eyeing up the title.

There is also 18-year-old Mirra Andreeva, who made the semifinals last year but is embarking on a breakout season that has already seen her win two WTA 1000 events this season.

Prize money

Prize money for the men’s and women’s singles champions is equal at the French Open, with each due to take home £2.1 million out of a combined £47m pot.

The runners-up will earn just over £1m, while prizes decrease for each round thereafter.

Winner: £2,166,912
Runner-up: £1,083,456
Semifinal: £586,341
Quarterfinal: £373,898
Round 4: £225,189
Round 3: £142,761
Round 2: £99,423
Round 1: £66,282

Where can fans find more ESPN tennis coverage?

ESPN’s tennis page has all the latest breaking news, analysis, features, rankings, Grand Slam title winners and more.

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